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Acute Atherothrombotic Disease and Severe Bleeding: A Difficult Clinical Presentation in Medical Practice Cover

Acute Atherothrombotic Disease and Severe Bleeding: A Difficult Clinical Presentation in Medical Practice

Open Access
|Dec 2015

Abstract

Management of antithrombotic therapy in elderly patients with unstable atherothrombotic disease and increased risk of bleeding is a major clinical challenge. We report the case of a 79 year-old diabetic man with rheumatoid arthritis on both oral corticosteroids and NSAID therapy with mild renal dysfunction, who presented to our hospital because of disabling claudication. Prior to admission he had several episodes of TIA. He also had recurrent small rectal bleeding and mild anemia attributed to his long-standing hemorrhoid disease. Angiography showed a sub-occlusive left internal carotid artery stenosis associated with a significant LAD stenosis and complex peripheral artery disease. Cataclysmic bleeding and hemorrhagic shock occurred in the third day post admission. Withdrawal of all antithrombotic treatment, blood transfusion and emergency sigmoidectomy were performed for bleeding colonic diverticulosis. Subsequently antiplatelet therapy was reinitiated and the patient successfully underwent left carotid artery endarterectomy and LAD stenting. He was discharged from hospital on the 21st day post admission and is doing well at 24 months follow-up.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1515/rjim-2015-0045 | Journal eISSN: 2501-062X | Journal ISSN: 1220-4749
Language: English
Page range: 349 - 354
Submitted on: Feb 23, 2015
Published on: Dec 10, 2015
Published by: N.G. Lupu Internal Medicine Foundation
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 4 issues per year

© 2015 Cristina Căldăraru, C. Popa, Ana Fruntelată, Ş. Bălănescu, published by N.G. Lupu Internal Medicine Foundation
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.